Author Archives: esanford

Mystery Technique #50

MT#50, ©Elizabeth Sanford

Are you curious about how this was done? I’ll explain next month, so be sure to sign up for email updates to find out!

 

ANSWER TO MYSTERY TECHNIQUE #49:

This is a close-up of a painting inspired by a dream about Georgia O’Keeffe; it’s part of an older series from graduate school.  I began with loosely painted acrylic shapes and spatters on Arches Cover. After they dried, I used paper stencils and spray paint to create a series of overlapping petal shapes, varying my distance from the paper to vary the density of the paint; I also added abstract outlines of petals with colored pencils. Next I used thin washes of acrylic to suggest some depth.

Meet me at OZ Arts!

Tales from the Anthropocene, side 2, ©Elizabeth Sanford

Come and see the amazing Modular Art Pods at OZ Arts Nashville! I was lucky enough to collaborate with Patricia Earnhardt; I did the outside, and she did the inside. Ours is a 6-foot cube called Tales of the Anthropocene; the event runs through June 25. Read more about it on Tony Youngblood’s site:

https://modularartpods.wordpress.com/

and here:

http://www.ozartsnashville.org/tnt-modular-art-pods/

 

Tales from the Anthropocene,side 2, ©Elizabeth Sanford

 

Tales from the Anthropocene, detail, ©Elizabeth Sanford

 

Be sure to check out Joseph Hazelwood’s amazing video installation on vintage TVs in the Escaparte if you go. Here’s a shot of our segment taken through our “sneak preview” cube; that’s me in the cobalt blue shirt.

 

Tales from the Anthropocene,Escaparte ©Elizabeth Sanford

Mystery Technique #49

MT#49, ©Elizabeth Sanford

Curious about how this was done? I’ll explain next month, so be sure to sign up for email updates to find out!

ANSWER TO MYSTERY TECHNIQUE #48:

I began with a yellow layer followed by an orange one on a piece of hot press watercolor paper. After it dried, I applied fluid acrylic magenta with a moldable foam stamp. I created the stamp by heating a piece of Pen Score with a heat gun and then pressing the foam on top of scattered wild rice. According to the package, you can even “melt away” unwanted designs by reheating the foam.